Migraine in general practice. A French multicenter study

A national survey has been conducted with 349 general practitioners in order to analyze the management of concerned episodic headache in general practice. This survey enabled collection of data from 2537 headache patients. The main data concered IHS diagnosis, severity of headache using the MIGSEV s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inRevue neurologique Vol. 161; no. 10; pp. 949 - 956
Main Authors Fabre, N, Nachit-Ouinekh, F, Becq, J-P, Chastan, G, Sénard, J-M, El Hasnaoui, A
Format Journal Article
LanguageFrench
Published France 01.10.2005
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Summary:A national survey has been conducted with 349 general practitioners in order to analyze the management of concerned episodic headache in general practice. This survey enabled collection of data from 2537 headache patients. The main data concered IHS diagnosis, severity of headache using the MIGSEV scale, management, practices and the impact on daily living (QVM and HIT-6 scales). Out of the 2537 included patients, 52 percent were migraine sufferers according to IHS criteria (code 1.1/1.2), 34 percent presented with migrainous disorders (code 1.7), and 14 percent were non-migraine headache patients. The distribution of management practices showed that 71 percent of them were given non-specific treatments, 46 percent of them specific treatments and 27 percent of them prophylactic treatments. Analysis of the impact of headache using the QVM or the HIT-6 demonstrated a relationship between diagnosis, migraine severity and disability. Analysis of the correlation between the severity of the last migraine attack as evaluated by the patient and that estimated by the doctor showed that the practitioner tended to underestimate the patient's pain. These results highlight the importance of communication between practitioners and migraine sufferers. Training of general practitioners in the use of simple tools such as the HIT-6 scale, should be helpful for a better evaluation of the impact of headache on daily living, and hence should lead to more optimal therapeutic management of headache patients.
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ISSN:0035-3787
DOI:10.1016/S0035-3787(05)85158-6